Marine lenders see slow growth in 2012

Marine lenders gathering for the annual National Marine Bankers Association conference described the last year as one of growing interest in loans, with a moderate increase in bookings through the early fall boat show season followed by a stall in mid-to-late October.

“This slowdown was likely precipitated by the global financial crisis and a related decline in consumer confidence,” the NMBA said in a statement. “Looking ahead, lenders see slow growth in both boat loan demand and funding, static borrower standards and terms and interest rates continuing at historically low levels.”

Held Nov. 6-8 in San Antonio, this year’s conference marked its 32nd anniversary and was attended by lenders and firms that provide services to the lending market.

Remarketers offered that they see some decline in volume as new (or aged) boat inventory is largely worked off. Marine insurers said premium revenue had grown a bit on a steady book of clients. Marine surveyors and maritime lawyers had similar views, suggesting that the used-boat market continued to be responsible for the core of their activity.

Reporting on the third-quarter survey of members, NMBA president Karen Trostle, of Sterling Acceptance Corp., said two-thirds of respondents indicated that lending criteria have remained the same; the remainder were divided between those who said the criteria became more or less stringent.

About half indicated that the dollar volume of loans booked in the third quarter was the same as in the previous year, 22 percent said volume was up and 33 percent said it was down. Asked about their outlook for the fourth quarter, 66 percent indicated they expect business to be the same or increase from the same period in 2010.

Gina Martin Adams, an institutional equity strategist and retail sector specialist with Wells Fargo Securities, told attendees that consumers can be expected to spend in fits and starts in coming quarters, with activity driven by employment, stocks, taxes, credit, and gas and food prices.

Although federal economists don’t link gas and food to core inflation, these are “going through the roof,” Adams said, and consumers know their ability to spend directly hinges on these costs. This also erodes confidence related to long-term spending on boats and other discretionary purchases.

Softness in housing, directly related to how people feel about their financial health and wealth, may not be resolved for another five years, Adams predicted. Until the bubble from overbuilding in housing is resolved, the other major drag on the economy will be a depressed construction jobs picture and growth in the many sectors that benefit from growing household formation, she added. Construction jobs were a primary driver of economic growth through 2008; lack of them is why the recovery has been so tepid.

Retail sectors seeing growth include warehouse clubs, health and personal care, food and beverage, and restaurants. On the declining side are furniture and home furnishings, appliances and electronics, department stores, and building material/garden stores, all influenced by the weak housing market.

Long-term, Adams said, until the government deals realistically with deficit reduction — tied tightly to health care reform — the vitality of the U.S. economy remains in jeopardy.

Caterpillar Inc. will close two facilities in Texas and Panama and is considering shutting its engine manufacturing plant in Illinois as part of a strategy to boost profitability and better handle business cycles, according to Reuters.

Danielle Brown, vice president and chief information officer for Brunswick Corp., was recently honored among the "Most Influential Blacks in Corporate America" as chosen by Savoy Magazine, a leading African-American lifestyle publication.